Richard Bartucci has pointed out a very important article "Regulatory
Czar wants to use copyright protection mechanisms to shut down rumors
and conspiracy theories" by Alec Rawls

They really do hate our Internet Freedom in the halls of power. Take
a look:

As Congress considers vastly expanding the power of copyright holders
to shut down fair use of their intellectual property, this is a good
time to remember the other activities that Obama's "regulatory czar"
Cass Sunstein wants to shut down using the tools of copyright
protection. For a couple of years now, Sunstein has been advocating
that the "notice and take down" model from copyright law should be
used against rumors and conspiracy theories, "to achieve the optimal
chilling effect."

...Cass Sunstein may be the most illiberal man ever to present himself
as a liberal. He also holds the most powerful regulatory position in
existence, overseeing every federal regulation. For a sample of his
handiwork, realize that he oversaw the EPA's recently issued transport
and MACT rules, which will shut down 8% of current U.S. electricity
generation.

Chapter 27: "Nightcrawlers"
An Excerpt from Blade of p'NaForthcoming, by L. Neil Smith
Early the next morning, Eichra Oren and I were awakened by someone
parked in our driveway, insistently and incessantly sounding their veek's klaxon. On a
shelf, my sympathetic sponge (not the same as a singing sponge), one of the stranger
features offered up by nautiloid civilization, was still the same as I had been last
night, road-weary, cranky and tired, but within a few minutes the sponge was my old self
again.
 READ ARTICLE

Libertarian Law: Competence and the Common Defenseby DataPacRat
A literalist interpretation of the Zero-Aggression Principle can imply
that pushing someone out of the way of a falling piano involves the initiation of force
against them, and is thus immorala result which goes so far out of common sense and
empathy that it can be used by anti-libertarians to disparage the ZAP. The trouble with
trying to refute this idea is that it's actually truepushing someone against their
will is an initiation of force against them.
 READ ARTICLE

Violence Solves a Lotby Kirby Ferris
One of the more insidiously deceptive lines of the socialist-liberal
agenda is the banal phrase: "Violence doesn't solve anything." How much retrospection is
required to understand that Hitler wasn't stopped by peace marches, negotiations, or
"conflict resolution" sessions? It is a horrible, disgusting task, but evil acts, whatever
shape they take, must eventually be countered by a superior, violent force.
 READ ARTICLE

Open Letter to FedGoonsby The Old Lady Out West
Surveillance might not work out quite as intended here in the rural West.
The other day I went to town and saw a big, black (clean) SUV at the only signal light in town.
It had quite a few stubby radio antennas and smoky glass windows (illegal for the rest of us),
so I wasn't surprised to see two young men in it with hard looking faces.
 READ ARTICLE

Online Censorship: Uncensoredby Jonathan David Morris
Yesterday morning I posted a column called "An Article in Protest of
Internet Censorship." It took about three seconds for the average reader to realize the
article was blank, and about seven more seconds of scrolling up and down on the page to
realize they weren't imagining it. The blankness of this column, of course, was no accident.
It was the point. That was my protest.
 READ ARTICLE

Diplomatic Carry
The Second Second Amendmentby Alan Korwin
Officials travel armed. When a contingent of our officials visits any
other country, they bring armed personnel in classic right-to-bear-arms manner. Life is
dangerous and the ability to protect yourself is a reasonable and prudent thing, a
fundamental human right of existence, a moral imperative. So they go armed. It's only
rational. Hillary and similar bring along enough firepower that if some of their group
go one way while some head off in another, they're both covered.
 READ ARTICLE

The unabridged audio version of my 1983 novel The Nagasaki Vector,
brilliantly read by the great libertarian radio host Brian Wilson, is finally
available for purchase.

Many feel that this is the funniest book I've written so farat least
intentionallyand features our old friend Win Bear, G. Howell Nahuatl, a
sapient coyote, time traveler Bernie Gruenblum, and Georgie, the time machine
who loves him.